actually many democrats consider the GOP budget to be an April Fool's joke too!

--- On Thu, 4/2/09, Bill aka LeFantome <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Bill aka LeFantome <[email protected]>
Subject: {Dawgs/Dittos} Re: Coleman finally concedes
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, April 2, 2009, 7:52 PM



maybe we can consider this an early april fool's joke for next year.... LOL   
hope not

SEAT AL FRANKEN!


From: woof- woof
Sent: Thursday, April 2, 2009 2:03 PM
To: [email protected], [email protected]
Subject: {Dawgs/Dittos} Coleman finally concedes



MN-SEN: Coleman finally concedes  
by Jed Lewison 
Wed Apr 01, 2009 at 07:20:04 PM PDT
One hundred forty-seven days after Minnesota's Senate election, and 86 days 
after the certification, it's finally over: Norm Coleman has thrown in the 
towel and conceded defeat.

Daily Kos has learned that Coleman made his concession in a telephone 
conversation with Al Franken, who expects to be seated later this week.

Via Politico, here's a roundup of some reaction to the news:

DSCC Chairman Charles Schumer publicly accepted Coleman's concession for Senate 
Democrats. "I never fucking thought that idiot would concede," Schumer said, 
"but he did."

RNC Chairman Michael Steele hailed the concession as a victory for the GOP. 
"This opens up a fresh new Senate seat for us to target in 2014," Steele said.

Mark Halperin at TIME echoed Steele's thoughts. "This gracious act by Norm 
Coleman clearly means that John McCain won the week -- I don't see how you can 
argue this turn of events any other way."

David Broder saw the potential for a more a bipartisan triumph. "It would be 
really smart politics for Franken to join the Republican Party," Broder said. 
"It would be a grand gesture recognizing that a lot of people voted for the guy 
who got less votes. As a former Democrat, a Republican Al Franken would be 
uniquely positioned to achieve the bipartisan status quo that marked the eight 
years of Bush's presidency."

For his part, Coleman said that by conceding he was finally making good on his 
election night promise to accept the judgment of voters. "I now accept that 
when voters chose change, they meant change in the Senate, not that they wanted 
someone to change their votes." 







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